
Ah, Only You
(My Muse, can create this) Frame of mind
An expansive, emotionally unguarded meditation on illness, devotion, mortality, and creative obsession—structured as a quilt itself, stitching together fragments of longing, proposals of love, confessions of inadequacy, and the desperate need for more patches of experience before the tapestry is complete.
This is one of Plahm’s longest and most emotionally exposed works, reading less like a single poem than a journal entry from the depths of infatuation, illness, and artistic urgency stitched together under the quilt metaphor. The opening acknowledges chronic illness as a thread woven not just through the poet’s life but through “The lives of all,” immediately expanding the personal into the communal. From there, the poem spirals through a dizzying range of emotional registers: pastoral longing (meadows, butterflies), romantic devotion (“Dance with me— / Once for joy, / Twice for hope, / Forever for love”), anguished proposals (“Marry me, / please”), self-doubt about the adequacy of diamonds, cards, and roses, and the startling image of the quilt eventually burned “In a refuse pile / of / Memories / Too heavy to bear.” The poem’s fragmentary structure—short lines, sudden pivots, italicized voices—mirrors the patchwork of its title. The Muse operates as both romantic beloved and creative engine, her “Visceral overload” fueling the poet’s output. The penultimate passage imagines the Muse speaking (“Goodness will win / my will—will suffice”), granting her a voice within the poet’s own tapestry. The closing image—”another patch / my quilt / of life / so desperately / needs”—returns to the central metaphor with an urgency that suggests the quilt is not decorative but survival itself: each patch another reason to keep living.
A sprawling, fearless poem that trades polish for raw emotional truth—and mostly wins the bargain. The quilt metaphor is both structurally generative and emotionally apt: it justifies the poem’s patchwork quality, where fragments of jazz, proposals, illness journals, meadow visions, and burning refuse piles coexist without conventional transitions. The strongest passages achieve genuine power through compression: “Suffering / Ecstasy / Both / Live in / The same / Moment” distills the poem’s emotional philosophy into six lines, and the desperate simplicity of “Marry me, / please” is devastating in context. The poem’s willingness to include self-doubt (“Is it / Enough?”) and the dark image of the quilt’s eventual burning gives it an honesty that more controlled poems sometimes lack. The imagined voice of the Muse near the end adds a haunting dimension—the beloved speaking through the poet’s own instrument. Where the poem challenges the reader is in its length and associative leaps; some sections feel like first-draft intensity that might benefit from editing, and the emotional pitch stays at such a high level that individual moments occasionally blur together. The short-line format, while creating visual fragmentation, can also feel breathless across this many stanzas. But the cumulative effect is undeniable—this is a life being lived on the page, stitched together in real time, and the quilt metaphor earns its keep by making that process the subject as well as the method.
It’s not over
this illness
still threads
within.
And
It’s not just
mine
It’s woven through
The lives of all.
Find me a meadow
With flowers
Butterflies
And you
My muse
I’ll happily
Pass through
To…
Your joy!
Some day
The tendrils on my quill
Will stop
Quivering
But
My muse
Should know
I
Love her.
And her
Visceral overload.
I need
More patches
On my
Quilt
The tapestry
Of my life
Continues to
Expand.
I long
To hear
Some Jazz
From
Your
Soul.
Direct to
Mine.
Dance with me—
Once for joy,
Twice for hope,
Forever for love.
When I’m with you…
My muse
I must keep all
I feel
Outside.
No diamond
Perfect enough
No wishful card
Says enough
The roses I gift
Their fragrance
Not sweet enough.
But,
My knee
On the floor
My bow
To your beauty.
My heart
Given totally
To you.
My total devotion
My hope
For the future.
I’m desperate,
My smile—
My Love—
Is it
Enough?
Marry me,
please
My exuberance for metaphor
Is a longing—
For expression,
A response
From your soul.
You are
My tunnel
to a
Towering clarity
Of thought and desire.
I hope
My muse has
A moment
Of clarity
And realizes
How much
She means
Not just to me—
Well,
Especially me
But to
The worlds
Inimitable
Souls.
After brushing
With heaven
Where will
That experience
Lead
Me?
I can only ponder…
And try.
My Quilt
Should be
Crafted
By
A friend
A lover
A muse
Someone
I trust.
And maybe, one day,
Burned—
In a refuse pile
of
Memories
Too heavy to bear.
Suffering
Ecstasy
Both
Live in
The same
Moment
My hall
Of mirrors
My calmness
My love
Exists
In thinking
About
You.
I’m drunk
On knowledge
On ignorance
On my infatuation
With life, with my Muse—
Her Influence
Laced through.
“Life’s short
Have dessert
First.”
Do I know
where my
Muse sleeps?
Of course, I do—
that repose
she gifts
keeps me
out of the
auction
of life
My memory
of her
at this moment
still
lights a
fire
within
As my Muse would say:
Goodness will win
my will— will suffice
my breath still exists.
I will love you again.
You—
another patch
my quilt
of life
so desperately
needs.
My fantasy
of hell
and heaven
lived.








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